Subscribe to this blog

Get Email Updates!

Search This Blog

"A nation can survive its fools, and even the ambitious. But it cannot survive treason from within. An enemy at the gates is less formidable, for he is known and carries his banner openly. He rots the soul of a nation, he works secretly and unknown in the night to undermine the pillars of the city, he infects the body politic so that it can no longer resist. A murderer is less to fear. The traitor is the plague." -Cicero

Exclusive: Alabama Supreme Court Ruling Could Come “Next Week”

A decision in the case of McInnish v. Chapman,
which claims that former Alabama Secretary of State Beth Chapman failed
to vet presidential candidates for the 2012 election, may be announced
“this week,” a reliable source told The Post & Email on Saturday
after a face-to-face conversation with Alabama Supreme Court Chief
Justice Roy Moore.The case was filed by Atty. Larry Klayman on behalf of plaintiffs
Hugh McInnish and Virgil Goode initially in October 2012, “asking the
court to order that Alabama Secretary of State Beth Chapman verify
president Barack Obama‘s eligibility – and all of the candidates — to be
placed on or remain on the November 6, 2012 general election ballot.”
After a denial in Montgomery Circuit Court, Klayman filed an appeal to the Alabama Supreme Court last March.

Chapman resigned her post as Alabama Secretary of State on July 31 of last year despite
having “garnered more votes than any other Constitutional Officer in
state history and was elected as President of the National Association
of Secretaries of State.”

Klayman is founder of Judicial Watch and Freedom Watch and authored a challenge to the NSA surveillance program, which became public after former NSA contract worker Edward Snowden told Glenn Greenwald of The Guardian of its breadth and depth last June from a secret location in Hong Kong. Klayman’s NSA case can be read here: Klayman 131216-NSA Opinion

Klayman also filed a case challenging Obama’s eligibility in Florida which in January was still pending and on which The New York Times reported in December, however uncomplimentary to Klayman its coverage might have been perceived.

An affidavit signed by Mike Zullo, lead investigator of the Cold Case Posse
which determined that Obama’s long-form birth certificate and Selective
Service registration form are “computer-generated forgeries,” was
included in the lawsuit, the only civil action in which the posse has
participated.

All decisions made by the Alabama Supreme Court are announced on
Fridays. Since last year, The Post & Email has contacted the court
on numerous Fridays to inquire as to whether or not a decision had been
made but was told “No decision yet” each time.

Alabama Supreme Court Chief Justice Roy Moore, who was ousted from his post a decade ago for refusing to remove
a monument of The Ten Commandments from the courthouse premises but
re-elected to the position in 2012, has previously expressed support for
those seeking the truth about Obama’s background and life story. Moore
specifically contended that Lt. Col. Terrence Lakin, who sacrificed an outstanding military career by asking that Obama prove his constitutional eligibility to serve as president by producing
an original, long-form birth certificate from Hawaii, “not only has a
right to follow his personal convictions under the Constitution, he has a
duty.”

Four months after Lakin was court-martialed and imprisoned in December 2010, the White House
released what it claimed was a scan of a certified copy of Obama’s
long-form birth certificate, although it was quickly declared a forgery
by graphics and computer experts. On March 1, 2012, Zullo officially
announced at the first of two formal press conferences that the image did not originate from a real, paper document.

Besides Moore, at least one other judge on the high court, Tom Parker, has expressed concern for Obama’s apparently fraudulent documentation as a result of the investigation of the Cold Case Posse.

Prosecutions are said to be coming in regard to the forgeries of Obama’s purportedly government-issued documents.